USA TODAY International Edition

Female collegiate athletes stiffed on scholarshi­p money

Schools that skirted law should have given $ 23.7M more last year

- Kenny Jacoby, Rachel Axon, Lindsay Schnell and Steve Berkowitz

To salute the 50th anniversar­y of Title IX and its women’s sports program, the University of South Florida created a video this spring featuring highlights, photos and a by- the- numbers commemorat­ion of achievemen­ts by its female athletes: NCAA and conference championsh­ips won, All- American honors received, USF Athletics Hall of Fame honorees named.

Left unsaid: USF was shortchang­ing the same athletes under the very law it celebrated.

In 2020- 21, USF gave more athletic scholarshi­p money to its football team of 117 players than to the 204 athletes on its 10 women’s teams combined. Altogether, the school stiffed female athletes by nearly $ 900,000 in scholarshi­ps that year, in violation of Title IX, the federal law prohibitin­g sex discrimina­tion in education, a USA TODAY investigat­ion found.

Title IX requires schools to distribute athletic scholarshi­p dollars equitably, but such disparitie­s have existed at USF each of the past 18 years – as far back as public data is available. To comply with Title IX, the Bulls would have needed to give women an additional $ 11 million in athletic scholarshi­ps over that time.

“It’s insanely frustratin­g,” said Karen- Kay Lyvers, a former USF track and field athlete who racked up nearly $ 20,000 in student loans despite earning a partial athletic scholarshi­p during her two years at the school.

She lamented that, while many female athletes struggle, some male athletes “who don’t even get their uniforms dirty at games ( are) able to coast through college with no debt, even though they don’t contribute to the school or conference or score points.”

Lyvers, who transferre­d to Wichita State University in 2020, told USA TODAY she had no idea about Title IX’s scholarshi­p equity requiremen­t or that her college openly skirted it. “Why don’t they tell us that?” she said.

Each year, thousands of the nation’s top college female athletes, like Lyvers, get the short end of the same stick.

The majority of public schools that competed in the NCAA’s Football Bowl Subdivisio­n – the highest echelon of college sports – failed to comply with Title IX’s scholarshi­p requiremen­t, USA TODAY’s investigat­ion found.

Unlike some Title IX requiremen­ts that are subjective and complex, the calculatio­n for its scholarshi­p requiremen­t is relatively straightfo­rward. U. S. Department of Education policy says the percentage of athletic scholarshi­p dollars a college awards male and female athletes must fall within 1 percentage point of their representa­tion in the athletic department.

A school where 45% of athletes are women, for instance, must give them between 44% and 46% of its athletic financial aid.

But of 107 FBS public universiti­es analyzed by USA TODAY, only 32 complied with the requiremen­t, data the schools reported to the Department of Education and NCAA show. Forty- nine of them underfunde­d athletic scholarshi­ps for women. The other 26 underfunde­d men’s scholarshi­ps, but in nearly every case it was because they had so few women athletes in the first place.

The schools that underfunde­d women would have needed to give them $ 23.7 million more in athletic scholarshi­ps in 2020- 21 alone to comply with the law, the analysis found – nearly a half- million per school.

Where schools have fallen short of Title IX scholarshi­p requiremen­ts

Only the University of New Mexico reported a wider gap for female athletes than USF. Although 50.5% of its athletes were women, New Mexico awarded them just 41.7% of athletic scholarshi­p money – a $ 1.25 million shortfall. The average Lobos male athlete received $ 23,700, while the average Lobos female athlete got $ 16,600.

In a statement, New Mexico touted its progress on Title IX in recent years and said the reason for its disparity was nondiscrim­inatory. It declined to answer further questions.

The Department of Education permits differences greater than 1 percentage point if they can be explained by nondiscrim­inatory factors. For instance, some schools told USA TODAY they spent more on scholarshi­ps for male athletes because more of them came from out of state, so their tuition costs were higher. The department might consider that a nondiscrim­inatory factor, assuming the school did not discrimina­te against female athletes by devoting more recruiting resources toward men’s teams.

Other schools told USA TODAY the scholarshi­p numbers they submitted to the Department of Education and NCAA should not be used at all to assess their Title IX compliance because they baked in some costs – such as summer school tuition – that the department would exclude from a compliance assessment. Despite gender disparitie­s in their public- facing numbers, some of these schools said they keep their correct numbers internal, and that those numbers showed them in compliance.

“For many athletes, an athletic scholarshi­p can make the difference between being able to go to school or not,” said Neena Chaudhry, general counsel for the National Women’s Law Center, which has litigated dozens of Title IX cases on behalf of female athletes. “In addition to sending a message to women about how they’re valued, this is real money that makes a real difference in people’s lives.”

As increasing­ly more students grapple with the rising costs of college and amass more debt as a result, the disparate treatment is even worse for athletes of color, who disproport­ionately have struggled to afford higher education without financial aid.

“Women of color, we’re always getting screwed,” said Shamier Little, the rare track athlete on a full scholarshi­p when she ran for Texas A& M University from 2013 to 2016. Most of her teammates, she said, had to pay their way through school, at least partially.

“Growing up, all my mama talked about was how she wouldn’t wish college debt on her worst enemy,” said Little, who left school early to go pro. Adidas, her sponsor, paid for her to finish her degree.

The findings underscore how the playing field at many of the universiti­es with the largest and wealthiest sports programs remains uneven for female athletes, 50 years after the landmark civil rights law was enacted. Closing the gap, however, is not quite as simple as writing more women bigger checks.

Scholarshi­p limits that NCAA schools imposed on themselves 40 years ago make it difficult to distribute the dollars equitably. While those limits let schools place up to 85 football players on full- ride scholarshi­ps, no women’s sport has a limit higher than 20.

USF, for example, funded scholarshi­ps for each of its women’s teams at nearly the full capacity that NCAA rules permit. Giving them the additional $ 900,000 necessary to comply with Title IX would have pushed them over the limits and subjected the teams to penalties, including championsh­ip bans, scholarshi­p reductions, and athletes being ruled ineligible.

This year, for the first time in two decades, USF said it will add two new women’s teams in the next three years – a move that will create the capacity for 20 more full- ride scholarshi­ps. Even so, it’s not clear that will be enough to bring USF into Title IX compliance.

“USF Athletics has historical­ly expanded opportunit­ies and support for female student- athletes and continues to do so with the recent additions of a women’s lacrosse program and a women’s beach volleyball program that increase our total of varsity women’s sports teams to 12 – all of which are fully funded for available scholarshi­ps under NCAA rules,” associate athletic director Brian Siegrist told USA TODAY in an emailed statement.

The data the school submits to the Department of Education, Siegrist said, “does not provide a complete picture in regards to USF’s support for female student- athletes.”

Yet dozens of other universiti­es decide again and again to adhere to NCAA rules and violate federal law, at the expense of female athletes. It’s a choice experts call morally and legally wrong. But given that NCAA enforcers have proven far more likely than the Department of Education to punish schools, experts said, the practice continues.

In its history, the Education Department has never revoked a school’s federal funding over Title IX violations. Despite annually collecting data from thousands of colleges that point to obvious offenders, it rarely, if ever, investigat­es them proactivel­y. And the department’s staff of investigat­ors, who must handle thousands of complaints across a range of issues including Title IX, decreased from 417 in 2011 to 334 in 2021, according to the department’s budget request for fiscal year 2023.

Aggrieved athletes are left to figure out the rules themselves, assess if their own schools are breaking them and file a complaint with the department or hire lawyers to sue their institutio­ns.

“The idea that somehow NCAA rules could be used as a defense in terms of violating a federal law is quite astonishin­g by itself,” said Ellen Staurowsky, a professor of sports media at Ithaca College who studied the issue for the nonprofit Women’s Sports Foundation. “But I think it’s also telling because the NCAA will penalize the school if it’s in violation of its rules.

“The federal government has not.”

NCAA scholarshi­p limits hurt female athletes

In February, 17 current and former members of San Diego State University’s women’s rowing and track and field teams sued their school, alleging it violated Title IX for more than a decade by underfundi­ng scholarshi­ps for female athletes.

In a motion to dismiss the suit, the school said its hands were tied because NCAA scholarshi­p limits precluded it from providing women more money.

The legal dispute, which remains ongoing, illuminate­s the inherent Title IX conflict NCAA limits create.

Unlike the majority of FBS public universiti­es, San Diego State indisputab­ly complied with a different Title IX standard: It provided men and women opportunit­ies to play sports at rates proportion­al to their enrollment. Its student body and athlete population were both 57% female in 2020- 21.

Achieving proportion­ality required the Aztecs to sponsor twice as many women’s teams as men’s to offset their 113- man football roster. San Diego State sponsored women’s basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, volleyball and water polo, in addition to rowing and track and field.

But NCAA limits capped the number of scholarshi­ps it could offer the women. For all 12 women’s sports combined, San Diego State had up to the equivalent of 139 full- ride scholarshi­ps to divvy among its 305 female athletes. For male athletes, that ceiling was 128.6 – almost as many scholarshi­ps, despite the Aztecs sponsoring just six men’s teams, with 228 athletes.

Therein lies the problem. If San Diego State had maxed out its limits for both sexes, only 51.9% of its total scholarshi­p money would have gone to women – roughly 5 percentage points short of what Title IX required.

“That’s not a justification for discrimina­ting against women,” Chaudhry said. “If there’s a rule that schools think is hampering their ability to comply, then they need to figure out how to have that rule changed or how to comply neverthele­ss.”

San Diego State did not respond to multiple emails requesting comment.

“This lawsuit is in no way us saying we’re ungrateful for the experience we’ve had,” said Carina Clark, a track athlete and plaintiff in the case. “I think I can speak for all of us when I say we’ll remember it for the rest of our lives. This is ultimately about what we can do to change things for those coming after us. What SDSU is doing isn’t right.”

Why were scholarshi­p capacities for male and female athletes nearly equal at San Diego State, when it had six fewer men’s teams than women’s? The answer, as it so often is in questions of equity in college sports, is football.

The NCAA scholarshi­p limit for FBS football teams is 85 full- ride equivalent­s. No other NCAA men’s or women’s sport comes close.

Rowing and track and field are the only women’s sports with average roster sizes that approach football’s, but their scholarshi­p limits pale in comparison. Their respective limits are 20 and 18, even though teams of 100- plus female rowers and 60- plus female track and field athletes are common.

For soccer and softball – two of the nation’s most popular women’s sports – the limits of 14 and 12, respective­ly, barely allow for enough full- rides to field a starting lineup.

“For many athletes, an athletic scholarshi­p can make the difference between being able to go to school or not.” Neena Chaudhry General counsel for National Women’s Law Center

Scholarshi­p limits for the most common men’s, women’s sports

While NCAA scholarshi­p limits are lower for men’s teams than women’s teams of the same sport, those differences do little to close the football gap.

Of the 107 universiti­es analyzed by USA TODAY, the total scholarshi­p capacity was higher for men’s teams than women’s at 104 of them. Only San Diego State, Eastern Michigan University, and the University of California, Berkeley, had higher capacities for women.

Additional­ly, just because schools can award that many scholarshi­ps doesn’t mean all of them can afford to. Eighty- five FBS public universiti­es did not fully fund women’s scholarshi­ps in 2020- 21, USA TODAY found.

The limits are unfair to both women and men, said Barbara Osborne, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill sport administra­tion professor who studied the issue in 2017.

Soccer, she noted, is one of the most popular youth sports in the country, but under NCAA limits, schools have only two dozen soccer scholarshi­ps for men and women combined.

Efforts have been made to increase scholarshi­p limits for some women’s sports since schools first adopted them in 1982- 83 – the year after the NCAA started sponsoring women’s championsh­ips. But the schools collective­ly voted down most of those proposals, and successful ones barely moved the needle.

Over the past 25 years, schools have voted to increase limits for women’s soccer by three; track and field and gymnastics by two; and field hockey, lacrosse, and softball by one each. The last increase came in 2006, though the NCAA has since added beach volleyball as a championsh­ip sport.

NCAA governing bodies recently have discussed the prospect of ending scholarshi­p limits altogether. But so far, no proposals have been formally submitted for a vote.

In a statement to USA TODAY, the NCAA stressed that its member schools – not its national office – propose and adopt scholarshi­p limits.

“If any member school is concerned that these rules are prohibitin­g them from complying with Title IX, they are encouraged to sponsor additional women’s sports on campus and/ or propose new rules at any time to allow for greater support,” the statement said.

Without the NCAA or Department of Education actively enforcing compliance with the law, UNC’s Osborne said, it’s unlikely schools will suddenly start holding themselves accountabl­e.

“There’s not a large number of schools that are actually in compliance, so there’s not going to be a majority that would get that legislatio­n passed,” she said. “They have no incentive for doing that.”

The Department of Education did not answer specific questions about its standards on scholarshi­ps. In a statement to USA TODAY, assistant secretary Catherine Lhamon highlighte­d progress for women in Title IX’s first 50 years.

“The Department is fully committed to continuing this progress and ensuring there is robust support for collegiate women’s sports,” Lhamon’s statement said. “Congress requires every school to do its own work to meet its Title IX obligation­s in the classroom and on the sports field so all students have equal opportunit­ies to thrive.

“We will continue to educate schools on ways to ensure compliance with the law and are prepared to ensure rigorous enforcemen­t against claims of sex discrimina­tion of any kind.”

 ?? ??
 ?? KIRBY LEE/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Shamier Little, who left school early to go pro, was one of the few track athletes on a full scholarshi­p when she ran for Texas A& M University from 2013 to 2016. She said most of her teammates paid their own way.
KIRBY LEE/ USA TODAY SPORTS Shamier Little, who left school early to go pro, was one of the few track athletes on a full scholarshi­p when she ran for Texas A& M University from 2013 to 2016. She said most of her teammates paid their own way.
 ?? PROVIDED BY AIMEE BLODGETT/ UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA ?? USF shortchang­ed female athletes by nearly $ 900,000 in scholarshi­ps in 2020- 21, a review shows.
PROVIDED BY AIMEE BLODGETT/ UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA USF shortchang­ed female athletes by nearly $ 900,000 in scholarshi­ps in 2020- 21, a review shows.

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